We have some more paper exhibits we've scanned in for you. They are more documents from the pile of exhibits SCO attached to the Declaration of Jeremy Evans, which in turn was in support of SCO's sealed Memorandum in Opposition to IBM's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Breach of Contract Claims, Docket Number 348.

We have Frank Sorenson to thank for picking these exhibits up at the courthouse and scanning them all. I haven't read them all yet myself, because just getting them organized was enough of a job for today, so we can read them together, and if anything stands out I can write about it later.

This is history, in the sense that this IBM motion was denied without prejudice to renew or refile after discovery is complete. But it's very likely it will be resurrected by IBM, because, for one thing, it wasn't fully briefed or argued before Judge Dale Kimball decided it just wasn't the time for any such motions, and so in that sense it's not history. And believe it or not, someday discovery will be over, and then we'll likely see all these documents reappear and become timely. Now we're ready.

In trying to decide how to present them, I thought maybe the best way would be to reproduce the Evans Declaration, making it clickable this time. The ones that are new are so marked, in red text. There are still exhibits listed that were filed under seal, but it is possible some of them will end up being unsealed. IBM, in its report on what documents it thought could be unsealed, said that all of them could be unsealed as far as they were concerned, except for two:

16. 12/01/04 SCO Sealed Exhibits to the Declaration of Jeremy O. Evans in Opposition to IBM's Motion for Summary Judgment on Breach of Contract Claims, except for Exhibits S-4 and S-6

SCO, in its report, said it thought only one of them, exhibit S1, could be unsealed, the Deposition of David Rodgers.

Update: One of the sealed exhibits, S7, "IBM Linux Strategy", is most likely this document [PDF].